Since 1990s, the memory of the Nazi-past has become an integral component for Germany’s national memory. However, this cultural framework brings along certain issues in a day and age in which - as Rothberg and Yildiz state in their essay on “Memory Citizenship: Migrant Archives of Holocaust Remembrance in Contemporary Germany” - the German population is made up not only by “a culturally and ethnically defined collective” bound to Holocaust memory but also by a large number of “migrants, refugees and other expatriates” (32) who do not share this past.